BUDOS said:
It appears that there be weaknesses within the Constitution? Or is it us?
It appears it is a weakness in us. The procedures are there, but we refuse to fix the problem within the constitutional framework. What you weigh is the path that will have to be taken the longer you wait to deal with a structural problem, the one in question here being continuous deficit spending. At some point if you don't address a critical national problem, you're faced with the dilemma Colombia had with Pablo Escobar. Extra-constitutional means to preserve a constitutional government and society.
Colombia faced M-19 Marxist terrorists and the cocaine cartels. An airliner blown out of the sky by Pablo, the Supreme Court stormed and half the justices murdered by M-19 in an attack financed by Pablo, assassinations of national political candidates, a truck bombing of the national intelligence agency HQ, judges hearing specific cases were murdered, car bombings, and so on.
The out of control violence was a direct challenge to their constitution and they were losing because they couldn't find Pablo. Their answer was to use extra-constitutional means to save the government. Police/military personnel formed death squads that went after his legal/financial apparatus the same way Pablo went after Colombian civil society. His accountants, bankers, lawyers, property managers, etc, were shot or bombed. Pablo moved his family out of country. He became isolated and cut off from his funding, and he was finally found and shot down in 1993.
Our problem is of a much different nature thankfully, but we will still face the same type of dilemma in relation to our debt. If the interest payment reaches a point of causing a financial crisis, then either the problem is fixed within the constitutional framework (but if so, how did we not fix it before?), or we use extra-constitutional means to fix the problem, whatever those options might be (and they don't have to be violent options in our case), or the constitutional system falls apart in its inability to fix the problem either inside or outside its framework. The closer we get to national instability caused by a financial crisis due to the debt interest payments, the more our options get narrowed to more and more extra-constitutional means.