All governments have to borrow for a wide variety of reasons. The trick is keeping the debt level reasonable (within a favorable range of debt to GDP).
I have no problem with that, if there's an actual drive to pay it back along with a plan that it will actually be done. There isn't. There never is. Which makes this suggestion a non-starter. It's like having a crack (money) addict (gov), and you (taxpayers) finally wake up and say, Wow, we need to get the addict some help, he's injecting, snorting, and now eating like 5 lbs. of pure (that would be massive unfunded/printing press spending) a day! One side wants to take the addict completely off crack, which is bad. The other wants to give him 6 lbs. with the stern words and soundbites that it's bad to do drugs and Just Say No, and that hopefully the temporairily sated crack addict will come to his senses. We all know, crack addicts don't give two F's what people say, think or want...and will lie, cheat, steal, and kill to keep that crack coming. We need people in charge that are going to take all the 5 lbs. away (no more deficit spending, no more printing press), and give the addict carefully measured doses (balanced budget, tax increases and only when a true ((such as Katrina, mag 11 earthquake in CA, supervolcano in WY)) national emergency deficit spending) to control the addiction.
Also not doing any borrowing at all makes it nearly impossible to do so if extraordinary circumstances arise where the government needs a load of cash quickly.
See above.
We can do this without torching most of the federal and state governments with almost no notice. We will probably not default but the collateral damage is going to be enormous.
There is 'no notice'. They have been seeing this play out along with the public and the rest of the world for months now. Anyone remotely involved with budgeting already knows the score long before that. There are no surprises here, only politics.
Chuck