life and debt youtube

but even that is vague because I do not usually handle a hundred dollar bill. That's how we want the show: a reader of eleven trillion through are clear: the climate is perfect. I drive from the state capital to state capital, I guarantee that each state is represented at 48. Let's roll.

I began my search for Augusta in Montpelier, Vermont, and Concord, New Hampshire. I clam chowder in a hard-thru service in Boston, south of Providence, through Hartford, Albany, south of Trenton, face to Harrisburg, then Dover. I jumped into the Chesapeake Bay in Annapolis, see the sights in DC, south of Richmond, Raleigh, Colombia, Tallahassee and surprisingly free movement of Atlanta. I head west to Montgomery, then in Jackson, south of Baton Rouge, Little Rock, Nashville, Frankfurt, Charleston, Columbia, Lansing and win the Indianapolis 500. I drive west to Springfield, Madison, say hello garrison Kellior St. Paul, in Des Moines and Jefferson City. I mess with Texas in Austin before going Oooooooklahoma city where the wind comes sweeping across the plains. Top Topeka, Lincoln, Pierre, Bismarck, Cheyenne. I catch a Broncos game before pressing the pedal to the metal to get to Santa Fe, Phoenix, Sacramento, Carson City, Salt Lake City, Helena, Boise and Salem. In Olympia there a parade in my honor with Bigfoot serving as grand marshal. All roll call votes in total: 13.105 miles in 218 hours, about 9 days.

But wait, there's more. So well that I threw it in reverse and return to Augusta in the same road. My odometer reads: 26.210 miles or 436 hours, about 18 days. Guy, I'm tired!

And now I'm going crazy. I will give one dollar bills on the road and the line ends at the end. That is $ 10,560 per mile. 18 days later I had $ 276,777,600 in the road.

Suppose my car is a time machine. When I drive my car starts to go back in time. How many I do travel to match the amount of money in the national debt? Well, if you use the figure of 11.1 billion dollars that make trips around 40,104. In my time in the car to take me back to 31 AD when Jesus might have heard in person, "For where your treasure is, there also will your heart.

So how can we overcome this financial mess? No idea. I'm unemployed, so I'm not alone in seeking advice money. Out can? Probably not. All I know is living beyond their reach, if you are an individual or government is not too elegant. In an individual, economic ruin called remains valid. Cost savings can not be reelected, but, again, could save your life. Respect for resources, either personal or monetary, will always prosperity for all.

For more see the YouTube video "Once Trillion Dollar Drive by Jason Goldtrap.

About the Author:

Jason Goldtrap is the author of the novel “Sarah Conrad of Eagle Creek” which you can read online at JasonGoldtrap.com

Article Source: ArticlesBase.comEleven Trillion Dollar Drive


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