Fiscal Cliff

Fiscal Cliff

Updated Aug 11, 2015 at 02:42AM EDT by Brad.

Added Jan 02, 2013 at 02:48PM EST by Don.

PROTIP: Press 'i' to view the image gallery, 'v' to view the video gallery, or 'r' to view a random entry.

This submission is currently being researched & evaluated!

You can help confirm this entry by contributing facts, media, and other evidence of notability and mutation.

About

"Fiscal Cliff" is a term referring to the potential consequences of tax increases and spending cuts on the United States budget deficit. It became a major talking point of the congressional debate as well as online discussions and parodies during the bipartisan negotiation process in December 2012.

Origin

According to an article on the BBC,[1] the phrase "fiscal cliff" was first used in a New York Times article from 1957, in which writer Walter Stern used the term in reference to the financial consequences of people buying their first home. On February 29th, 2012, Federal Reserve chairman Ben Bernanke popularized the term when speaking to the House Committee on Financial Services when warning about the effects of spending cuts caused by the Budget Control Act of 2011[8] and automatic tax increases from expiration of the Bush Tax Cuts in 2013.

"Under current law, on January 1st, 2013, there is going to be a massive fiscal cliff of large spending cuts and tax increases. I hope that Congress will look at that and figure out ways to achieve the same long run fiscal improvement without having it all happen at -- at one date."

Spread

On December 4th, 2012, the AnimationonFox YouTube channel uploaded a video showing the character Mr. Burns from the animated TV show The Simpsons explaining the fiscal cliff (shown below). Within one month, the video received over 3.4 million views and 6,000 up votes.



On December 31st, the "Les Fiscal Miserables" Tumblr[5] blog was launched, which highlighted image macros referencing the Broadway musical Les Miserables with politicians working to solve the fiscal cliff economic crisis. The same day, The Huffington Post[3] published an article featuring a slideshow of notable examples from the blog (shown below).


CHARGE EM FOR THE LICE, EXTRA FOR THE MICE HERE A LITTLE SLICE, THERE A LITTLE CUT TWO PERCENT FOR LOOKING IN THE MIRROR TWICE THREE PERCENT FOR SLEEPING WITH THE WINDOW SHUT CRYING AT ALL IS NOT ALLOWED NOT ON MY CASTLE ON A CLOUD AND NOW TM ALL ALONE AGAIN NOWHERE TO TURN,NO ONETO GO TO WITHOUT A HOME WITHOUT A FRIEND WITHOUTA FACETO SAY HELLO TO ON MY OWN

Bipartisan Agreement

On January 1st, The Daily Mail[4] published an article titled “Fiscal ‘Cliff’ Bars, Dr. Fiscal ‘Cliff’ Huxtable and Les Miserables all get the hilarious Internet meme treatment,” which featured several image macros using the fiscal cliff crisis as a punchline. On the following day, the United States House of Representatives approved a bill to avert the fiscal cliff, which maintained tax cuts for people earning less than $400,000 per year and raised taxes for anyone making more. Several "Scumbag Congress" image macros were created on Quickmeme[7] referencing the way Congress handled the fiscal cliff threat (shown below).


CREATES THE FISCAL CLIFF. APPLAUDS THEMSELVES FOR AVOIDING IT quickmeme.com</

Also on January 2nd, a video of President Barack Obama explaining the fiscal cliff agreement was uploaded to YouTube (shown below).



Notable Examples


FISCAL CLIFF POLITICAL BAR WE RE ALL D0OMED NET WT $17TRILLION © Blake Joyce Donahue originally shared Theres an idea! #fiscalcliff #fiscalcliff2013 Delete Multiple Items Are you sure you want to move these 535 items to the Recycle Bin? Yes You and 6 others +1'd this. 1 person reshared Maurice Dixon 40 minutes ago +1 Yeah!!!! Reposting thi WHAT IFITOLD YOU THE FISCAL CLIFF IS A LOAD OF CRAP? memegenerator.n THE FISCAL CLIFF A MONUMENT TOFAILEDIDEAS FISCAL 49% 43% 8% Federal State Municipal CLIFF

Search Interest

External References

Recent Videos 1 total

Recent Images 21 total


Top Comments


+ Add a Comment

Comments (26)


Display Comments

Add a Comment


Hey! You must login or signup first!