"What we are effectively doing, I say this to the young people of America whom my colleagues represent, is leaving our children and grandchildren the tab for fighting a war, letting them pay for the lion's share of it by simply adding it to the national debt"
About this Quote
Spratt is doing a neat piece of moral bookkeeping: he takes an abstract budget fight and turns it into a family invoice. The line isn’t just about debt; it’s about consent. Wars are typically sold with the rhetoric of sacrifice, yet here the sacrifice is deferred, quietly, onto people who never voted for it. That’s the sting in “effectively doing” and “simply adding it” - the accusation that the hardest decision has been dodged, not made.
The phrase “I say this to the young people of America whom my colleagues represent” is a calculated wedge. He’s not addressing youth because they’re a reliable voting bloc; he’s using them as a moral mirror for older lawmakers. It reframes the debate from partisan arithmetic to intergenerational ethics, implying that today’s representatives are failing the most basic test of stewardship: don’t mortgage the future for the present’s political convenience.
“Tab,” “lion’s share,” “pay for” - the diction is deliberately domestic, almost diner-language. That’s the point. National debt can be numbing; a tab is legible and a little shameful. Spratt’s subtext is that financing a war through borrowing is a kind of fiscal cowardice: if leaders won’t raise taxes or cut spending to cover the cost, they’re admitting the war isn’t worth asking current citizens to visibly fund it.
Contextually, it sits in the post-9/11 era of expensive, long-running conflicts underwritten by deficits - a critique of the “have it both ways” politics of war without immediate price tags.
The phrase “I say this to the young people of America whom my colleagues represent” is a calculated wedge. He’s not addressing youth because they’re a reliable voting bloc; he’s using them as a moral mirror for older lawmakers. It reframes the debate from partisan arithmetic to intergenerational ethics, implying that today’s representatives are failing the most basic test of stewardship: don’t mortgage the future for the present’s political convenience.
“Tab,” “lion’s share,” “pay for” - the diction is deliberately domestic, almost diner-language. That’s the point. National debt can be numbing; a tab is legible and a little shameful. Spratt’s subtext is that financing a war through borrowing is a kind of fiscal cowardice: if leaders won’t raise taxes or cut spending to cover the cost, they’re admitting the war isn’t worth asking current citizens to visibly fund it.
Contextually, it sits in the post-9/11 era of expensive, long-running conflicts underwritten by deficits - a critique of the “have it both ways” politics of war without immediate price tags.
Quote Details
| Topic | War |
|---|---|
| Source | Help us find the source |
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