10 Things That Would Happen if the United States Went Bankrupt - YouTube

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The specter of the American government declaring bankruptcy gets trotted out particularly often
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any time there’s a change in the majority party.
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Because we’ve been told for decades what a large, scary number America’s National
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Debt is, the populus fears that the time when it causes another Depression could come at
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any time.
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It couldn’t even be said to catch us by surprise, since there were many alarmists
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that would be able to tell us that they told us so.
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Well we here at TopTenz are not alarmists.
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We’re here to tell you what would happen in the event of the USA declaring bankruptcy
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for the first time since 1933, and the prospect isn’t pretty.
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But we’ll also tell you why certain aspects of it, by their nature, ensure it’s very
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unlikely.
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Certainly, stranger things have happened, though.
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After all, other nations have experienced it hundreds of times in modern history, and
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their experiences are the evidence we’ll be using for this list.
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10.
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Massive Shortages Across the Board
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In 2001, Argentina declared bankruptcy brought on by the fact its government had attempted
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to match the value of its pesos with the US dollar.
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The impact went far beyond the immediate impact on their currency and their accounts.
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It meant that gas stations often no longer had fuel to sell.
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It meant that grocery stores ran out of food.
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After all, what company would ship such goods to regions filled with little to no money,
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but lots of desperation?
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You might be inclined to believe that America is a resource-rich country that can sustain
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itself off home-produced goods (especially if you have an anti-globalist, America First
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outlook) but America imports vastly more resources than it exports (roughly fifty percent more),
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and not for nothing.
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Considering that bankruptcy also comes with with massive inflation, many communities will
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be full of people whose money no longer has enough value to make sending resources to
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them worth it for companies.
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9.
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Banks Will Empty Out
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Back in 1933 during the Great Depression, banks were forced to close as they were reviewed
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for solvency.
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As a result, thousands of local banks were closed and savings went with them as patrons
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rushed them to withdraw their money, although it’s worth noting that at the time there
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was an overabundance of banks so that there was one for every thousand people.
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Since then, we’ve seen a similar event happen in 2008 when the US government had to bail
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out its largest national banks.
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However, as of 2016, the Federal Reserve reported that the banks had only grown larger since
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their bailout nearly a decade earlier.
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In the event of the government declaring bankruptcy, there will be no one to bail the banks out,
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so then the closings would be far larger in impact, and in terms of lost savings.
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It would be a particularly embarrassing case of not being able to learn from a mistake.
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8.
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Chinese Currency Will Collapse Too
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It’s scary for many Americans to think that America owes $1.2 trillion to China as of
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August 2017.
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Indeed, that was used as a campaign point during the 2016 presidential race.
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But actually, in a somewhat twisted way, it’s the result of a policy that keeps America
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and China strong.
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China needs to keep its currency, the Yuan, lower than the US dollar because keeping their
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products affordable in America keeps their manufacturing profitable.
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Thus they have a fixed exchange rate with the US dollar.
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If the US dollar collapses, then the yuan plummets in value in order to continue staying
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at a fixed rate during American trade, or they’ll lose vital demand to keep their
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manufacturing centers open.
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So if you were ever worried that the Chinese government would use this debt leverage to
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sink the US economy, you can be assured it would be only slightly less suicidal for them
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than it would be for North Korea to use any of their nuclear weapons.
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7.
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Barter Economies Will Be Ready
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Nothing would help the average person remember that money is merely a medium of exchange
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with no intrinsic value more than if they suddenly had none and no reliable means of
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getting it.
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Such was the fate of much of the American public in 2007 when the nation was rocked
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by a major recession.
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What millions of Americans did instead of succumbing to fear was turn to a barter system.
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According to Reason.com, by January 2008 Craigslist.com’s barter pages had increased one hundred percent
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in terms of postings and traffic.
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Now consider how much more extreme the financial pressures brought on by a national bankruptcy,
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instead of a recession, would be.
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This was not something that was only done among average poor people, either.
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2007 also saw companies and corporations in the United States increase their use of bartering
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for goods and services by roughly $16 billion.
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Under these circumstances, people who have stockpiled basic necessities may well make
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off like bandits or gain considerable influence in their communities for when the economy
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recovers from the bankruptcy.
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6.
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Selling Off Public Property
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In Albert Brooks’s bestselling novel 2030, he postulates a scenario where, after a particularly
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devastating earthquake strikes Los Angeles, the USA is too bankrupt to pay to restore
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the city and has to let Chinese contractors come to fix it at the cost of Los Angeles
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becoming part of China for 50 years.
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While in real life something that extreme is unlikely, it certainly would not be unprecedented
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for the federal government to sell off assets for debt, even in relatively recent times.
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Westcoastbk.com tells us that in the 1990s this was the reason that a number of military
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bases in America were closed.
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Even without selling off the Gross Domestic Product of any cities, the federal government
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has access to resources that would more than deal with projected debt.
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In 2014, it was reported that the US has access to $128 trillion in mineral rights alone,
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on land and offshore.
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The square mileage of that is larger than the entire land surface of Canada.
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Just maintaining all tens of thousands of underutilized buildings owned by the federal
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government costs $1.66 billion annually, so if a significant number of those buildings
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were sold it would save the government considerably, never mind all the money that could be made
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from the sales.
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In short, the federal government has plenty to offer our debtors and many ways to tighten
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its belt if debts come due.
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5.
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Many Will Be Driven from Their Homes
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Despite the ability of the government to (likely) eventually deal with enormous debt on a national
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level, in the interim it would still be able to wreak havoc on even government employees.
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During the 2013 government shutdown, employees were evicted while on furlough or even those
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that were still active because their pay was suspended and their landlords couldn’t wait
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for them to receive back pay before removing them from their homes.
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Considering that’s what happens to the people that continue to be vital to the government,
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what fate can the privately employed people expect?
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Well, consider this: in a three month period following Greece’s economic crisis and despite
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billions in bailouts, Athens’ homeless rate rose roughly forty percent, and there was
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little improvement to the economy years later.
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For an indication that’s closer to home, the Mortgage Bankers Association reported
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that 1.2 million households were lost to the 2007 American recession.
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Frankly, it would be amazing if there weren’t cities of homeless people for at least awhile
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after the government declares bankruptcy.
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4.
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Bond Lawsuits
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It’s often forgotten in this turbulent political climate that part of America already has declared
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bankruptcy: the recently devastated territory of Puerto Rico.
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Even before it was devastated by Hurricane Maria, Puerto Rico was in such massive debt
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that it sought bankruptcy protections in May 2017 for its seventy billion dollar debt.
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One consequence of this was that the US government was sued.
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This was because it had guaranteed that the bonds that had been issued to people who invested
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in Puerto Rico back when the Puerto Rican government was doing much better (the downturn
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essentially began in 2006 when financial stimulus from the federal government was cut off).
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So if America’s federal government defaults on the approximately four trillion dollars
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that the government owes to foreign governments other than China, there would be lawsuits
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that would last long after the economy would likely be restored.
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3.
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Demanding Money from the World Bank
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In the event that that then-President and others do not want to risk the humiliation
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of selling off American land and mineral rights to pay off debt, appeals can be made to the
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International Monetary Fund/World Bank.
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There certainly wouldn’t be any moral objections that the IMF could be expected to express.
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In February 2016, for example, the organization was contemplating providing four billion dollars
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to Azerbaijan and $3.5 billion to Nigeria in bailout money even though the two countries
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were notorious for corrupt and abusive actions taken to prop up their petroleum industries.
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By contrast, in 2011 it was reported that IMF had exerted considerable effort in attempting
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to persuade developed countries, particularly the United States of America, to give loans
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in developing countries even though there was little to no hope that they would ever
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see a return on their investments.
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So naturally if the IMF wants the developing world to continue developing, it and other
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nations will very likely be willing to provide some measure of bailout money.
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2.
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Get Away With Not Paying All Debts
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Before we get to the grimmest single entry on this list, let’s take a break and talk
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about something that’s not so dark, at least as far as the US itself is concerned.
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Returning to the 2001 Argentinian bankruptcy once more, or more specifically an act performed
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by the Argentinian government several years after.
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With equal amounts of gall and savvy, they offered to pay their creditors back one third
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of the amounts owed in exchange for the forgiveness of all debts.
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That might seem completely unacceptable, but the thought of getting one third of their
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money back, even if it meant sacrificing the promise of getting twice as much down the
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line at some unspecified time, was enough that fully half of all the creditors took
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the deal.
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Thus it’s quite possible that if, in this hypothetical situation, the American government
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waits some time, it could persuade its creditors that accepting considerably less than they
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were owed would be preferable to making it impossible for the American economy to recover,
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and thus increase the risk they never get anything.
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As a popular saying in the world of finance goes, “When you owe the bank $100, you have
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a problem.
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When you owe the bank $1,000,000, they have a problem.”
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1.
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Massive Increases in Violent Crime
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Unsurprisingly, newly bankrupt governments have consistently seen massive drops in their
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security if for no other reason than they can’t afford their law enforcement.
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Examples of this in recent times include when, in 2013, the 2012 Olympics left Rio de Janeiro
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bankrupt.
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What ended up happening was the budget for all forms of security was cut in half and
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only police salaries were still funded.
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Now imagine the impact that could have on DNA tests and other forms of crime scene investigation,
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airport security, secret service protection, etc.
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Now add on top of that all the people that will be furious because they lost their life
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savings (forever, as far as they know), anxious because this is a highly unfamiliar situation,
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and potentially a situation where vital resources such as oil and food won’t be accessible.
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Consider that in 2013, a year after declaring bankruptcy, the city of San Bernardino, California
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saw a fifty percent rise in its homicide rate, and remember the advice city attorney James
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Penman gave: “Lock your doors and load your guns.”