
In October 1, 2026, you stand a good chance of losing all of your Savings!!! This date is very different than all the rest. Uncontrolled spending by Trump and lack of Fiscal Foresight by Our Legislators is going SCREW ALL OF 🇺🇸!!!
BANKRUPT AMERICA!
This script is designed for a phone call to your Representative or Senator’s office. It uses the specific fiscal data points we’ve discussed—the $1 trillion interest threshold, the $185 billion Golden Dome cost, and the Operation Epic Fury spending—to force a direct answer on the October 1 deadline.
The “October 1st Terminal Date” Call Script
Staffer: “Thank you for calling Senator/Representative [Name]’s office. How can I help you?”
You: “Hi, I’m a constituent from [Your City/Zip Code], and I’m calling to voice an urgent concern regarding the October 1, 2026, fiscal deadline. I’ve been following the CBO and Treasury reports, and the math on our national debt no longer adds up.”
Staffer: “I can certainly pass your concerns along to the [Senator/Representative]. Is there a specific bill you’re referencing?”
You: “Yes, specifically the convergence of the One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA) tax cuts with the surging costs of the Golden Dome missile shield and Operation Epic Fury.
I have three direct questions for the [Senator/Representative] that I would like a written or verbal response to:
- On Systemic Insolvency: We are approaching a $40 trillion national debt while net interest payments are hitting $1 trillion per year. On October 1st, when the new fiscal year begins, does the office acknowledge this as a ‘Terminal Date’ for our current spending levels?
- On the ‘Fiscal Pincer’: How does the [Senator/Representative] plan to fund the $185 billion Golden Dome and the $900 million-a-day cost of the war in Iran when our revenue floor has been permanently lowered by the OBBBA?
- On Transparency: Why isn’t the ‘Macroeconomic Precipice’ of October 1st being broadcast as a national emergency to the American people? Are we facing a systemic insolvency event or a credit rating downgrade on that date?
I’m concerned that while the ‘Golden Dome’ is being built to protect us from missiles, our own national debt is becoming the bigger threat to our survival. I’d like to know what the [Senator/Representative] is doing to prevent a total economic collapse this autumn.”
Staffer: “Thank you. I have noted those points and will ensure the [Senator/Representative] sees them.”
You: “Thank you. I’ll be following the upcoming Senate Finance Committee hearings closely for these answers. Have a good day.”
Why this script works:
- It uses “insider” terminology: Using terms like “Net interest threshold” and “Terminal Date” signals that you are an informed constituent, which often gets your call escalated to a legislative assistant rather than just being logged as a tally mark.
- It demands a “Yes/No” on Insolvency: By asking specifically about “Systemic Insolvency,” you are forcing them to address the core fear: that the government can no longer pay its bills without printing money and devaluing the dollar.
- It bridges the War and the Economy: It highlights that we cannot afford a regional war and a space-based shield simultaneously without a “Fiscal Armistice.”
This is a powerful addition to the script. It addresses the central tension of the “Fiscal Pincer”: the contradiction between a platform of “America First” fiscal restraint and the reality of a $35+ trillion debt driven by massive military expansion and permanent tax cuts.
To get a real answer, your call needs to point out that the One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA) and the Golden Dome were both signature initiatives of the current administration. By framing it this way, you are asking your legislator to explain why the executive branch hasn’t balanced the “Greatness” of these projects with the “Reality” of the math.
The “Spending Control” Script Add-on
Staffer: “I have noted your concerns about the October 1st deadline. Is there anything else?”
You: “Yes. I want to know why Congress has not exercised its ‘power of the purse’ to control President Trump’s spending.
- On Executive Spending: The administration is currently running a $2 trillion annual deficit. While the One Big Beautiful Bill was marketed as a middle-class win, it has stripped our revenue just as the President’s Operation Epic Fury and the Golden Dome are draining the Treasury. Why hasn’t Congress set a hard ceiling on these executive military outlays?
- On the ‘America First’ Math: If the goal is ‘America First,’ how does a $1 trillion annual interest payment to foreign debt-holders serve that mission? Every day we delay the Fiscal Armistice, we are handing more control of our future to international creditors.
- On Accountability: Does the [Senator/Representative] support the President’s current spending trajectory, or will they vote to pause the Golden Dome funding until we have a balanced budget? We cannot have a ‘Big Beautiful’ country if we are fundamentally insolvent.”
Why this addition is effective:
- It challenges the “Safe” Narrative: Many legislators try to avoid criticizing the President’s projects (like the Golden Dome) for fear of political blowback. By asking why they aren’t controlling the spending, you are reminding them that Congress, not the President, is constitutionally responsible for the budget.
- It highlights the “Interest Trap”: Pointing out that interest payments go to “foreign debt-holders” is a strong way to frame the issue for “America First” offices. It makes the debt a matter of National Sovereignty.
- It demands a choice: It forces the office to take a stand: Do they support the “Great Projects” at the cost of bankruptcy, or do they support fiscal survival?
The Texas Connection
Since you are in Texas, you should specifically mention that while we appreciate the Lockheed and Raytheon jobs in North Texas, we don’t want those jobs to come at the cost of a dollar collapse that wipes out our savings.
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