I.O.U.S.A.
(One Nation. Under Stress. In Debt.)
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Actors: David Walker (Peter G. Peterson
Foundation), Bob Bixby (Concord Coalition)
Directors: Patrick Creadon
Format: Closed-captioned, Color, DVD-Video, NTSC
Language: English
Number of discs: 1
Rating: NR (Not Rated)
Studio: PBS (DIRECT)
DVD Release Date: April 7, 2009
Run Time: 60 minutes
Listening to the experts and political pundits weigh-in on the
recession is likely to leave you confused about why we’re in
this mess. Democrats and Republicans predictably resort to
blaming each other, while economists tend to explain the
situation using jargon too complicated for the Average Joe to
comprehend.
For this reason, director Patrick Creadon is to be commended
for making I.O.U.S.A. (One Nation. Under Stress. In Debt.), a
nuts and bolts documentary which seeks to explain the burgeoning
financial crisis in layman’s terms. The film opens by stating
the basic proposition that the most serious threat to the U.S.
is our own irresponsibility when it comes to spending. America’s
present predicament is then put in perspective via telling
analogies of the Roman Empire shortly before its fall.
Next, Creadon cleverly sets about proving his premise by
relying on a combination of archival footage and some
surprisingly frank interviews with concerned, if not fed-up
folks like billionaire Warren Buffett, fired Treasury Secretary
Paul O’Neill, the late Tim Russert, CNBC’s Jim Cramer,
presidential candidate Ron Paul, and former Comptroller General
of the U.S. David Walker.
Secretary O’Neill whose words fell on the deaf ears of
President Bush when he was a member of the current
administration, warns that, “When you get extended to the point
that you can’t service your debt, you’re finished.” Ron Paul is
shown sounding an equally-dire alarm in 2000 telling then Fed
Chairman Alan Greenspan during a House hearing that he had so
mismanaged the economy that he should start looking for another
job.
Greenspan’s replacement takes it on the chin, too, his hit
coming courtesy of animated Jim Cramer who shouts that “Ben
Bernancke is an academic who has no idea” how bad the crisis is.
“The Fed is asleep,” an exasperated Cramer concludes.
Apparently, America’s basic problem boils down to the fact it
is a nation which has become addicted to credit in the wake of
outsourcing so much manufacturing overseas. To balance the
budget we either have to raise taxes or cut spending, because a
country which consumes more than it produces is simply
unsustainable.
Tough talk for tough times.
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Watch a trailer for I.O.U.S.A.