So you might have heard that the U.S. government has shut down. Well, it didn't. Not gonna lie, it would have been pretty bad. It would perhaps not have been as bad as it sounds, since we still have had a (mostly) functioning government. In case you weren't entirely sure what a "government shutdown is," since our political leaders could not agree on a budget plan (until the last minute), all programs not deemed "essential/excepted" by the Office of Management and Budget would have ceased for the rest of that fiscal year (6 months).
For some Republicans and some Tea Party members, this would have been a desirable result, since it would have been similar to what they would have wanted anyway. No tax increases with major cuts (total cuts, in fact) to everything deemed unessential or unexpected. The things that would have been deemed essential/excepted would have been things that were required to keep the government running such as/as well as Social Security, Medicare, Homeland Security, food inspection, air traffic control, etc. Defense spending could have been cut a little, but the three big uses of government money (defense, medicare, and social security) would have remained unaffected, so even with these huge spending cuts, the problems of the deficit/debt would not have been solved.
So anyway, you might be wondering how we avoided the government shutdown. Read these links:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2011/03/01/AR2011030107063.html
http://www.lasvegassun.com/news/2011/apr/11/shutdown-avoided-time-around-real-budget-wrangling/
Yeah. Temporary solution. Our government now has until March 18 to come up with a real budget.
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