US National Debt hit $37 trillion in August.
Then $38 trillion in October.
Then $39 trillion in March.
#TrumpMustGo #NationalDebt #TrumpKillsAmerica #RepublicansOwnThis #NoRepublicansEverAgain #USPol
US National Debt hit $37 trillion in August.
Then $38 trillion in October.
Then $39 trillion in March.
#TrumpMustGo #NationalDebt #TrumpKillsAmerica #RepublicansOwnThis #NoRepublicansEverAgain #USPol
Wow. The #trump administration just dropped their budget wishlist to #Congress. Trump wants to add nearly $7 trillion to the $39 trillion national debt with his new military budget.
The White House detailed a military funding hike of more than 40 percent to an eye watering 1.5 Trillion dollars.
White House is also seeking a 10 percent cut to nondefense spending, with a proposed reduction of $73 billion from federal programs like Medicare, food stamps, day care subsidies, and to zero out funding for minority-owned businesses.
All war, all white, fuck everyone else, apparently. At least the republicans are being honest about what they’ve always been. Capitalist childraping racists who worship at the alter of Mammon.
https://www.politico.com/news/2026/04/03/trump-white-house-budget-00857167
: #billionaires #defundbillionaires #delusionaldon #democrats #donaldemptyhead #donaldthehoaxtrump #donemptyhead #eightysix47 #nationaldebt #nokings #trumpcurse #trumpstein #trumpsteincoverup #usnationaldebt #uspol #uspolitics @uspolitics :
US NATIONAL DEBT OVER $39 TRILLION
RISING AT AN ACCELERATING RATE
Mastodon Post
The United States national debt went up by a trillion dollars in about five months.
But at least billionaires got big tax breaks they didn't need.
COMPREHENSIVE FACT-CHECK:
PRESIDENTIAL STATEMENTS (MARCH 2026) -
PART 2
PERIOD COVERED: March 1 - March 29, 2026
SUBJECT: President Donald Trump
METHODOLOGY: Claims are cross-referenced with independent economic data, federal law enforcement statistics, non-partisan research institutes, and historical records.
CATEGORY 4: CRIME & PUBLIC SAFETY
CLAIM 8: National Violent Crime Rates
The Statement: During a rally in Ohio on March 20, 2026, the President claimed: "Violent crime in our country is up 50, maybe 60 percent. It's higher than it has ever been in the history of the United States because of radical left cities."
🔴 VERDICT: FALSE
The Facts: National crime data does not support this claim. According to the FBI’s Uniform Crime Reporting (UCR) program and the Bureau of Justice Statistics, violent crime peaked during the pandemic (2020-2021) but has been steadily trending downward in most major categories (including homicide and aggravated assault) since then. While certain localized areas face specific challenges, the national violent crime rate is nowhere near historical highs (which occurred in the early 1990s), nor has it spiked by 50% recently.
CLAIM 9: Federal Law Enforcement Funding
The Statement: In a March 15 interview, the President stated: "We have doubled the budget for local police, while the Democrats voted to defund them entirely."
🟠 VERDICT: MISLEADING
The Facts: While the administration has directed certain federal grants toward local law enforcement, the federal government does not fund local police budgets (which are determined by city and state governments). The claim that the federal budget for local police has "doubled" is unsupported by current federal spending bills. Furthermore, while some progressive lawmakers previously supported reallocating police funds, the Democratic party platform and current Democratic leadership in Congress have consistently voted to maintain or increase federal funding for law enforcement (such as through the COPS program).
CATEGORY 5: THE ECONOMY & NATIONAL DEBT
CLAIM 10: Reducing the National Debt
The Statement: At a press conference focusing on the economy early this month, the President claimed: "My administration is paying down the national debt at a record pace. We are reducing the deficit."
🔴 VERDICT: FALSE
The Facts: Data from the U.S. Department of the Treasury shows that the total public debt has continued to increase. Furthermore, the non-partisan Congressional Budget Office (CBO) projects that the annual federal deficit is expanding, largely due to a combination of sustained high federal spending, rising interest costs on existing debt, and revenue reductions from extended tax cuts. There is no mathematical evidence that the debt is being "paid down."
CLAIM 11: Tax Cuts Paying for Themselves
The Statement: Defending the continuation of the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act provisions, the President stated: "The tax cuts paid for themselves immediately through massive economic growth."
🔴 VERDICT: FALSE
The Facts: Extensive analyses by the Congressional Budget Office (CBO), the Joint Committee on Taxation, and independent macroeconomic research firms confirm that the tax cuts did not pay for themselves. While they did stimulate short-term economic growth and corporate investment, the resulting growth was not sufficient to offset the loss in tax revenue. The CBO estimates that the cuts added significantly to the national deficit over their designated window.
CATEGORY 6: HEALTHCARE
CLAIM 12: The Affordable Care Act (ACA)
The Statement: On social media in late March, the President posted: "We have successfully terminated the disaster known as Obamacare and replaced it with the best healthcare numbers ever."
🔴 VERDICT: FALSE
The Facts: The Affordable Care Act (commonly known as Obamacare) has not been terminated. It remains the law of the land. While the administration has made regulatory changes (such as expanding short-term, limited-duration insurance plans and altering funding for healthcare navigators), the core architecture of the ACA—including Medicaid expansion in participating states, protections for pre-existing conditions, and the health insurance marketplaces—is still active. Millions of Americans continue to receive their coverage through the ACA framework.
SOURCES CONSULTED:
FBI Crime Data Explorer (CDE): https://cde.ucr.cjis.gov/
Bureau of Justice Statistics (BJS): https://bjs.ojp.gov/
U.S. Department of the Treasury (Debt to the Penny): https://fiscaldata.treasury.gov/datasets/debt-to-the-penny/
Congressional Budget Office (CBO) Budget and Economic Outlook: https://www.cbo.gov/data/budget-economic-data
Joint Committee on Taxation (JCT): https://www.jct.gov/
Kaiser Family Foundation (KFF) Healthcare Tracking: https://www.kff.org/health-reform/
TAGS:
#FactCheck #USPolitics #March2026 #NationalDebt #CrimeStats #Healthcare #Accountability

We have just published this short video on YouTube and many other channels. This is the transcript: The national debt is not what you think. We’re told it’s debt, and it has to be repaid, but what if repaying it would crash the economy? That is what would actually happen. The point is, the...
WASHINGTON (AP) — The national debt surpassed a record $39 trillion on Wednesday, a milestone that comes just weeks into the U.S.-Israeli war in Iran. The unprecedented figure highlights competing administration priorities, from passing a massive tax law and boosting defense spending and immigration enforcement to chipping away at the debt itself — the latter of which Donald Trump promised to do as both a candidate and as president. The Government Accountability Office outlines some of the impact of rising government debt on Americans — including higher borrowing costs for things like mortgages and cars, lower wages from businesses having less money available to invest, and more expensive goods and services. #NationalDebt #economy #debt #RepublicansDidThis #TrumpRegime
https://apnews.com/article/us-national-deficit-hits-39-million-6ff73495bae701b5c009d3da5515ca3a

The U.S. national debt has hit a record $39 trillion. The deficit hit the milestone Wednesday just weeks into the U.S.-Israeli war in Iran. The Government Accountability Office says rising debt can raise borrowing costs for mortgages and cars. It can also squeeze wages and push up prices. Budget advocates warn that growing interest payments force tougher tradeoffs. The federal debt has surged under both Republican and Democratic presidents, most recently fueled by wars, large-scale pandemic spending and tax cuts. The U.S. national debt hit $38 trillion five months ago — and $37 trillion two months before that.